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Around Epiphany ………

 Around Epiphany ……….….…

                                                                    

Around Epiphany is intended to provide a place to present

information normally not included in the Parish Bulletin or in

other sections of Epiphany’s website.

Periodically items will be included on a variety of subjects in

which you might be interested. For example the first few items,

included in the following index, cover the Parish Mission

and the Pastoral Council.

You may click any item in the index to quickly locate it.

In addition Around Epiphany provides a mechanism

for you to contact us by e-mail. Just click

                   mail for AroundEpiphany

to  do so.

We encourage you to send us your comments, suggestions,

questions, or criticisms. We will try to respond to you in all

cases and incorporate them in future items.

 

Index of Around Epiphany Items:

January 2, 2008 Pastoral Plan – Goal 5

December 26, 2007 Pastoral Plan – Goal 4

November 6, 2007 Pastoral Plan – Goal 3

October 12, 2007 Pastoral Plan – Goal 2

August 10, 2007 Pastoral Plan – Goal 1

July 3, 2007 Dropping down a level: the Pastoral Plan

June 7,2007 Still more on the Mission Statement !!

May 1, 2007 Parish Mission Statement -- Community

April 2, 2007 Epiphany have a Mission Statement?

                                         ******

January 2, 2008 Pastoral Plan – Goal 5

To empower the youth and young adults of our
parish to live as disciples of Jesus Christ in our
world today.

In August, when we were discussing Goal 1 of the Pastoral Plan, 

To deepen our understanding of and

commitment to our faith,

we described how the Pastoral Council thought it essential that

the needs of the adults of the parish be addressed.

Consequently, it set as a primary objective the offering of 

on-going, comprehensive educational programs and activities

for adults of the parish, and Adult Faith Formation was the

subject of much discussion.

Goal 5 focuses on another of our great needs, the formation of

our youth and young adults, not just with children attending

Epiphany’s School, but with the children not attending it, with the

young people we often forget about, those attending high school,

college and beyond.Two months ago, New York Times columnist

David Brooks wrote about an identifiable phase of life emerging

between adolescence and adulthood that he calls the “odyssey

years.” He describes an extended period lasting into the 20s,

the same span of years Goal 5 is aimed at.

The astounding challenges encompassed by Goal 5 becomes

Obvious in reading its objectives:

  1. To draw young people to responsible participation 

in the life, mission, and work of our Catholic faith

community, by inspiring them with the joy of the

Gospel and the strength of the Eucharist; by

cultivating their gifts and talents; and empowering

them to use their talents in leadership and ministry

in the Church.

  1. To foster the total personal and spiritual growth of

each young person by helping them apply their

Catholic faith to their daily life experiences; by

fostering in them a personal spirituality and

prayer life; and by promoting their positive

self-image.

  1. To invite and enable their ongoing conversion to
Jesus in holiness of life by offering retreats that

will help them develop a personal relationship

with Jesus; and, by helping them develop their

biblical and doctrinal literacy and a deeper

appreciation of scripture and the teachings of the

Church through bible study.

First steps have already been taken towards providing our 

youth and young adults with the opportunity to become active

participants in our parish through social, service, spiritual and

catechetical experiences.

The EDGE Catholic Middle School Ministry is the parish youth

group for students in grades 7 & 8. Designed to meet the social,

educational and spiritual needs of middle school youths, EDGE

provides a great opportunity for middle school youth to grow

their relationship with Jesus Christ and the Catholic community.

Today’s EDGE participants will, as they grow older, become the

seed bed for other groups of youth and young adults in the parish.

Further studies are intended to evaluate still  other types of

organizations to best meet the needs of Epiphany Parish youth.

 

                                         ******

December 26, 2007 Pastoral Plan – Goal 4

To engender a spirit of unity among all

our ministries and organizations.

Goal 3 called for us to encourage broader participation of

Parishioners in parish life.

Such participation requires that we know what’s going  on in the

parish. That’s the focus of Goal 4.

 

We’ve already completed some of the actions called for under this

goal.

No doubt, you’ve already seen copies of the Parish Organization

Directory: the booklet with the tan cover can be found at the

entrances to the church. A copy is also available on this web site.

Just click Ministries & Organizations to review it.

You’ll find it contains descriptions of some 60 Epiphany

organizations. If you’re interested in joining one or more of them,

just get in touch with the contact person indicated. Visitors and

new members are always welcome.

You may also have noticed that the parish bulletin and this web

page are attempts to make Epiphany News available to

parishioners, whether they are inclined to “read” or “search the

web.”

Some actions, delayed because of our many 50th Jubilee activities,

and yet to be planned include:

·       To hold a Formation Evening:  a guest speaker and

refreshments will allow parishioners to relax together and get

to know the members and objectives of other organizations.

·       To schedule “leader “ meetings 2-3 times during the year. 

The intent of these meetings is to  provide opportunities for

further leader formation, for more intensive sharing of

organizational plans, and, for fostering inter-organization

cooperation.

 

                                         ******

November 6, 2007 Pastoral Plan – Goal 3

 

        To encourage broader participation of our

         parishioners in parish life.    

                      

Goal 1 of the Pastoral Plan focuses on our “personal

formation” in the faith.

Goal 2 on broadening our view of Christianity to include all

those who could use our help in the parish, the neighborhood

and the world.

We’ve been acting like a football team sitting in the classroom,

studying the x’s and o’s of the coach’s favorite plays. Goal 3 is

aimed at getting us all out on to the field to participate in the

game. In a culture which seems to encourage more and more of

us to become “couch potatoes,”  it may be the most difficult goal

we’ve discussed so far.

Unless we all take on the challenge of participating, there’s little

sense in having a Parish Plan, little hope for the parish, and even

less hope for the future of our Church. 

Four objectives are identified. The first 3 aim to build attendance

at Sunday liturgy, to increase participation in the liturgy and to

welcome new members to our community.

The 4th aims at knowing the talents and interests of parishioners

So  that we might better enlist their support and services.

The objectives are:

     To increase the number of parishioners who attend

      weekly  liturgy.

     To explore better ways to invite people to active

     participation in the liturgy

     To convey a sense of welcome to new parishioners.

     To determine the gifts, strengths and interests of all

      parishioners; and, to encourage them to share their

      gifts of  time, talent, and treasure for ministries of

      service and prepare them for this ministry.

1. To increase the number of parishioners who attend weekly

    liturgy.

With nationwide statistics indicating that less than 40% of

Catholics attend Mass regularly, the first order of business, if we

are to do more than preach to the choir, is to find ways to reach

parishioners who don’t join us at Sunday Mass. Studies are

planned to investigate communicating with them by

newsletters, directories, web sites, word-of-mouth,

personal invitations, … . Ways must also be found to make

attending parishioners and guests more welcome and thus

to maintain our level liturgical participation.

Finally, for those persons who won’t come, we must

overcome those factors which are keeping them away. For

those who can’t come, it is our Christian responsibility to

find ways to help them to do so.

2. To explore better ways to invite people to active

participation in the liturgy including carrying the gifts,

Eucharistic Ministers, lectors, ushers.

Coming to Sunday liturgy is different than attending the

theater. We attend the theater to be entertained; we come to

liturgy to participate in worshipping our God. We should all be

doing our parts as ushers, Eucharistic ministers, lectors,

choir members, carrying up the offertory gifts, singing in

the pews.

To improve participation we need to explain to parishioners the

meanings of the liturgical rites and the benefits they bring to us.

For example, many found Fr. Greg Fairbank’ s homilies at the

recent 40 Hours Devotions very helpful.

Expanding musical styles and selections should encourage

greater involvement. Tapping into the abilities of younger

parishioners will give us many more talented participants.

3. To convey a sense of welcome to new parishioners.

Once again, coming to Sunday liturgy is different than attending

The theater. At the theater we are members of an audience. At

liturgy we are members of a community, members of the body

of Christ. New parishioners should be welcomed. Make

room for them in the pews. Introduce yourselves to them.

Really mean it when you exchange the kiss of peace with

them. Exchange a few words with them as you make your way

to the parking lot. Invite them to come with you to your next

parish affair.

At the parish level, we will be collecting information regarding

their family, interests, etc. at the time they register, so that we

may better welcome them, identifying programs or activities of

interest, and inviting them to participate. To facilitate these

efforts, we will continue the personal home visitation of new

parishioners.

4. To determine the gifts, strengths and interests of all

parishioners; encourage them to share their gifts of time,

talent, and treasure for ministries of service and prepare

them for this ministry, a parish-wide survey will be

conducted in order to develop a database of the unique gifts

and interests of parishioners that will allow us to discern how

to use those gifts when the occasion arises.

 

                                         ******

October 12, 2007 Pastoral Plan – Goal 2

 

To stimulate a greater awareness of the needs

of the human family and to discover new ways

 to respond to those needs.

 

Caring for Ourselves: Goal 1 is primarily introspective. It looks

towards deepening “our” understanding of the faith and

strengthening “our” commitment to it.

Caring for Others: Goal 2 turns our focus to “others”. Our Lord

dedicated his life to others – gave his life for others – on the

cross. He made carrying our crosses a requirement for being his

followers: "If any want to become my followers, let them deny

themselves and take up their cross daily and follow me.” (Luke

9:23) He went so far as to identify himself with the hungry,

thirsty, naked and imprisoned: “just as you did it to one of the

least of these who are members of my family, you did it to me.”

(Matthew 25:40)

So goal 2 looks towards making the Parish community more aware

of the needs of the human family and towards discovering new ways

the Parish can act to respond to those needs. It sets two objectives:

1.     To encourage more active participation of

      all parishioners, including senior citizens,

      young adults, and families in our outreach

      programs.

2.     To increase awareness of local and global

      needs.

The first calls for increasing the number of parishioners helping in

our outreach programs. It also looks towards expanding the scope

of all parish committees to include assistance to people with

varied needs in our parish and in the surrounding community. In

addition, the possibility of forming a St. Vincent de Paul

organization in the parish is to be explored.

The second objective is aimed at making ourselves more aware of

the less local, the more global needs of the human family, using

homilies and the Sunday Bulletin to encourage us respond to them

with our prayers, our charity and our political activities.

 

                                         ******

August 10, 2007 Pastoral Plan – Goal 1

 

To deepen our understanding of and commitment to our faith.

 

A “Felt Need”: The first goal is easily arrived at! The Pastoral

Council, as probably most parishioners, feels a great need exists to

deepen our understanding of and commitment to the faith. Without

that, fulfilling the Parish Mission Statement is, at best, problematical.

Objectives of Goal 1:  2 objectives were immediately established:

 

1.     To offer on-going, comprehensive educational

programs and activities for specific targeted

audiences.

2.     To continue other programs that provide

opportunities for study, reflection and sharing,

e.g. Parish Retreats, Disciples in Mission, …

 

Current Activities: The 2nd objective assures that activities already

deepening the faith life of some of Epiphany’s parishioners not be

sacrificed. Such activities include Epiphany’s School and Religious

Education Programs, Bible Study, Community of Disciples,

Charismatic Prayer, pre-Cana, pre-Jordan, the Rite of Christian

Initiation of Adults and Parish Retreats.

The Council intends to evaluate these efforts to see if there are

ways in which additional support or coordination with other Parish

activities can further enhance their effectiveness.

New Approaches:  However, the Council felt a need for still more!

And that’s where confusion and challenge exist!

Just what does our “felt need” mean, just how do we proceed?

Goal 1 talks of understanding our faith. And, to many,

understanding means education. Some ask don’t we already do

that for the children in Epiphany’s School and Religious Education

Program? Others wonder if we shouldn’t do more for our high

school and college students.

Still others ask what are we doing to educate Epiphany’s adults:

shouldn’t we invite some guest speakers or plan a lecture series

for Lent and Advent?

Nostalgia’s Temptation: It’s difficult not to get all wrapped up in

nostalgia, wishing for the “good old days” when the Parish was

the center of neighborhood life. Remember 3 or 4 priests living in

the rectory? A school full of children – 2 classes of each grade

being taught by the good sisters? Parishioners flocking to

evening missions and novenas?

Face it! The parish, the neighborhood, our culture have changed.

These are the days of 1 priest rectories; small schools without

sisters; fathers and mothers both working; lives so frenzied and

full that it’s nearly impossible to schedule an evening meeting.

In Today’s Reality, What Are We To Do: Few priests, small

schools! A bishop recently commented, “Many Catholic parents

are now hard pressed to give an explanation of the faith to their

children and grandchildren. … Truly we have reached the point

that the significance of celebrating and living the sacraments

has to be consciously put forward to the entire family, not just

the children.”( Bishop Alvaro Corrada, Catechumenate April 2006)

What About The Adults: Indeed, what about the adults?

Mustn’t they also continue to grow In faith? Doctors, nurses,

priests, deacons, teachers, police and fireman are all required

to keep themselves up to date by continuously training.

Shouldn’t all Christians do the same? Indeed, don’t they have

both the right and responsibility to be active participants in

forming and transforming parish life? 

Adult Faith Formation:  And so the words Adult Faith Formation

became an important element of Goal 1. To undertake the

formation of Epiphany’s adults is no easy chore, for it will require

serious thinking about the life of our parish, about adult faith

formation and the mission of the church. You might want to think

about it, even study something about it. If so, why not check out

Our Hearts Were Burning Within US, a November 1999

publication of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops.

It’s available at http://www.nccbuscc.org/education/ourhearts.htm

In formulating Goal 1, the Council may have hit upon the “new”

need of Adult Faith Formation. But notice Objective 1 calls for 

on-going, comprehensive educational programs and activities

for specific targeted audiences.  And action steps ask that a 

specialist in adult faith formation be invited to meet with parish staff

and appropriate committee chairs to explore possibilities for the

parish.

Still other action steps call for identifying people from different age

groups interested in developing and implementing faith formation

programs; soliciting leaders from the parish interested in

coordinating and conducting formation activities for specific

targeted audiences; and, finally inviting parishioners to attend

specific programs.

Think about it! Think about joining in the excitement

that’s sure to come?

                                ******

July 3, 2007 Dropping down a level: the Pastoral Plan

Mission Statements are great: inspirational and impressive! But, at their level, little gets accomplished. The young husband may promise his wife a “palace:” without detailed plans, that’s all she’ll get.

To get anything done, we’ll need more than a Mission Statement.

Any high schooler would be overjoyed to find out Euclid stopped with his axioms! But with only axioms the world would be without geometry and all it does for us!

So the Pastoral Council worked its way down closer to detailed plans,  developing 5 goals, each with its own subsidiary objectives supported, in turn, by a 3rd level of  action steps. As we unwind our way out of the 50th Jubilee Celebrations, they’ll discuss all these with all Epiphany’s Organizations and together we’ll proceed to build the palace which is the Epiphany Community.

The sum total of Mission Statement, Goals, Objectives and Action Steps is the Epiphany Parish Pastoral Plan.

The 5 goals are:

1.     To deepen our understanding of and commitment to our faith.

2.     To stimulate a greater awareness of the needs of the human family and to discover new ways to respond to those needs.

3.     To encourage broader participation of our parishioners in parish life.

4.     To engender a spirit of unity among all our ministries and organizations.

5.     To empower the youth and young adults of our parish to live as disciples of Jesus Christ in our world today.

Why don’t you reflect on these goals, their relationship to the Mission Statement and how they address the needs of Epiphany as you see them? Next time we’ll start discussing how the Council got to these goals and the objectives and action steps they associate with them.

******

June 7,2007 Still more on the Mission Statement !!

 

No one sent in their thoughts. But don’t hesitate to send them

in now. We’d be glad to share them – just  an e-mail is all

that’s needed.

We left off last time just as we were about to see how the

Pastoral Council feels we should accomplish the mission

Jesus gave us to

Spread the Good News of Salvation.

Their first suggestion is that we welcome all – everyone

to be part of our worshipping  community

through prayer and the Eucharistic celebration

and the other sacraments;

That’s why we’ve joined this community, isn’t it?

Welcoming them to join us in prayer; to join us in what is unique

to Catholic communities:

Jesus instituted these sacraments as the means

by which we Catholics are showered with God’s

graces.

Few other churches have preserved that Christian

heritage; few others can give their members the

strength, the perseverance, the inspiration that

Christ’s sacraments give us.

Think about it: the sacraments make us capable of enjoying

and living the good life. And it is in living that good life that

we give an example – a witness to the world.

That, in its very living, spreads the Good News of Salvation.

Indeed with Christ’s grace,

we give witness to the Truth in word and deed;

we teach and proclaim God's Word.

Most importantly,

we love our brothers and sisters;

we reach out to them

healing them in their need,

serving them in their poverty.

And there you have it –

the entire Parish Mission Statement.

That is challenge Jesus gives us every Sunday as we leave

Mass. Let’s pray that we are able to meet it,

pray through the intercession of Mary our

Mother to the Father, Son and Holy Spirit

to guide us.

 

******

 

May 1, 2007 Parish Mission Statement -- Community

We were just getting around to why it mentions community

so often when we were interrupted. Have you thought about

that?

Obvious, isn’t it?

If we were an “individual,” we’d only be one. There’d be no

need for a parish or a church to meet in. If we were “one”

you wouldn’t need me and I wouldn’t need you. We wouldn’t

have husbands, wives, children or parents.

But we do need each other.

Jesus recognized that. One of the first things he did was

gather together 12 disciples. And that was the first Church.

The Pastoral Council composed the Mission Statement to say

we are not any old kind  of community. We’re a very special

community: a Catholic Christian community, called just like

those first 12 through God’s gift of faith in Jesus Christ. Our

faith is our trust in the Good News Jesus came to give us:

We are saved!

Good News that He not only gave us but told us –

commissioned us – to give to everyone else.

Oops! Out of space again! Next time let’s look at how the

Pastoral Council suggests we accomplish the mission Jesus

gives us.

But this isn’t intended to be a monolog. What do you think

about our

Catholic Christian community?

What are we doing right – or wrong; how could we do better

at spreading  Jesus’ Good News?

We’re interested in your comments or questions. Why not

click mail for Around Epiphany and send them to us now.

 

                                  ******

April 2, 2007 Epiphany have a Mission Statement?

 

Of course we do!

It was first published when Monsignor James Baldrick was

Pastor and can be seen in our Church Bulletins.   

It’s good you asked!

 

The Pastoral Council just recently revised it ever so slightly.

So it might be a good time to review it. 

First, here it is:

 We, the faithful of Epiphany of Our Lord Church are a Catholic

 Christian Community committed to the gospel message that

Jesus Christ is our Savior. Therefore, our mission is to spread

 the  Good News of Salvation. 

 We strive to accomplish this mission by:

·       welcoming all to be part of our worshipping  community

 through prayer and the Eucharistic celebration and the

 other sacraments;

·       witnessing to the Truth in word and deed,

·       teaching  and proclaiming God's Word;

·       loving our brothers and sisters;

·       healing those in need;

·       serving the poor.

We pray to Father, Son and Holy Spirit, through the intercession

of Mary, our Mother, to guide us.

 What do you think of it?

 Just a few words – but it says a lot!

Space here is limited, but next time we can get a word in edge-wise,

let’s discuss  “community.”

Why don’t you think it over in the meantime.